I have NOVA V's and I am not happy


I have a Mark Levinson 585 and a pair of Sonus Faber Olympica Nova V's and although I admittedly have some room acoustic issues that I am working on I am not happy with the sound. 

I listen to music LOUD. This Pairing thru a pair of Kimber Cable 8TC's gets bright in what I think is the 2 to 4 khz range and the sonus faber nova's seem to mute the lower end of female vocals, artist like Macy Gray or Tina Turner dont seem to have the same drive in the lower octaves. At the same time the upper end of vocals like Sheryl Crow can get too bright and cause fatigue (I am assuming this is in the 2 to 4khz range) I have tried every speaker placement you can think of, toe in, toe out. distance from front wall and I am adding acoustic treatments as fast as they can be shipped. 

Here is my question, I had Mark Levinson 436 Mono Blocks in the past connected to a pair of B&W Nautilus 802's thru a pair of MIT Shotgun bi-wire speaker cables and I never noticed that system to be bright. Granted that system was in a different room in a different house. Everyone is telling me that B&W is a brighter sounding  speaker by far over Sonus Faber. If I decide after all my room treatments that I am not a fan of the Sonus Faber sound where should I turn for my replacement speaker? Or is it Mark Levinson's Fault? I want Rich Lush Loud Musical sound. I like a decent sound stage, I also really love it when when you hear decay from the instruments. I don't really care if that's what is neutral or not that's what I like :) 

Where did I go wrong and what can I do to fix it?

Thanks Lee

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Use DSP or a parametric EQ.  My source is computer-based so I can use FabfFilter Pro-Q 3 but there are tons of options out there, software/hardware/both that are pretty cheap compared to changing amps and speakers.

FabFilter

Lots of people have speakers that are too big for the room they use.  Carpeting or hard floor?  Ceiling treatment?  Lots of ways to alter the sound.  Changing cables will only do so much.  Kimber 8tc is not bright in my system.

Sonic Tools on the iPhone. Free. Probly available for Android, too. Sound pressure, spectrum analyzer and more. I’ve used the spectrum analyzer while playing music to see what frequency ranges are popping. You can see what “bright” looks like and go from there.

A similar iPhone product was recommended to me by Dr Roger West from Soundlab. 

+1 Audio Troy. What source(s) are you using?  

I had a similar problem that revealed itself when i listened to Mahler symphonies which I believed to be bright sounding on the peaks.  I thought about it a lot and tried some isolation pucks under my gear and was able to tame the problem. 

Vibration is problematic to a lot of audio equipment. It may be your equipment is fine, but needs to be better isolated - particularly at the volume you like to listen.

Best,

I'd have the amp checked out. Capacitors next to big heatsinks have short lives.